Montana Republican Tim Sheehy denounced incumbent U.S. Sen. Jon Tester during a recent debate for “eating lobbyist steak” while Sheehy was fighting in Afghanistan
In one of the nation’s most important Senate races, Tim Sheehy isn’t just facing one self-imposed mess; the Montana Republican is actually facing several.
Montanans used to split tickets, voting for Democrats and Republicans. Growing partisanship looks likely to kill that tradition, which may mean Democratic Sen. Jon Tester loses his reelection bid.
This year, Montana voters will consider whether to approve a pair of ballot measures that would make the biggest changes in decades to how the state elects its leaders.
Two years after the U.S. Supreme Court overturned Roe v. Wade in the Dobbs decision, voters in ten states will be considering ballot measures on abortion this fall – including Montana.
Tester took aim at Biden and the Department of Education for denying federal funding to Montana universities based on failure to meet DEI standards.
Both Montana candidates for U.S. Senate recently answered specific questions regarding the state's affordable housing crisis.
Part of a national debate over outside money and political extremism, CI-126 and CI-127 ask voters to make deep changes to primary and general elections.
At an event sponsored by the League of Women Voters, supporters of Constitutional Initiative 126 and 127 said that both measures are meant to work together, but because of the state’s rule about one subject per amendment, the two appear on the ballot separately. And, both could stand alone, if passed by the voters.
One of the first ads aired by Senate Veterans Affairs Committee Chairman Jon Tester's reelection campaign focused on his work passing the PACT Act.
Republicans saw this year's Senate map as a seemingly once-in-a-decade opportunity, but the chamber is tightening to Montana and Ohio.